YOUR CART

Our Brands

Trusted brands using certified ethical and sustainable business practices.

Go4Growth

Go4Growth helps voluntary organizations, community groups, social enterprises, and small businesses develop the skills, confidence, and knowledge to win public sector procurement contracts and grow. Their fully funded program includes a self-service software platform with training, tools, templates, and other digital content, access to events, and one-to-one mentoring. Go4Growth also offers free Public Sector Supply Ready (PSSR) accreditation and a free Carbon Net Zero Planning Tool. They tailor support to under-represented groups to ensure that every demographic has access to relevant services. Go4Growth is a member of Social Enterprise UK.


Gobnait Pure Raw Bee Honey

Gobnait specializes in pure raw Sri Lankan honey from an indigenous bee called Apis cerana indica. They educate people about the benefits of apiculture, provide free equipment, training, and bee-friendly plants to small-scale farmers and beekeepers, and work with Ayurvedic doctors to reintroduce forgotten medicine made from bee honey. Every jar of Gobnait honey is unique. They are one of the few apiaries in the world to harvest from each bee colony separately, which means each jar has a different color, aroma, taste, and health benefits. The enterprise draws its inspiration "to help heal humanity" from Saint Gobnait, the patron of bees and beekeeping who dedicated her life to helping the sick.


Go Do Good Packaging

Go Do Good Packaging is a research-led design lab that develops and manufactures waste-to-value materials and sustainable packaging. They use agricultural and industrial waste materials to create solutions that are plastic-free, home compostable, commercially viable, and ecologically regenerative. Their coated food packaging is oil, water, and moisture resistant and can be printed with compostable inks. Go Do Good offers fold-and-pack designs that are free from tape or adhesives, heat-sealable standup pouches, and water-activated stickers. They've also developed a transparent film that is made from carbon-sequestering algae and can be used as a sheet or heat sealed into pouches, a wood-free paper that is print-friendly and made from invasive water hyacinth plants, and a coir wrap that can be used as a protective pouch or bubble wrap alternative for shipping fragile items. Go Do Good works with partners around the world on new material development and waste-to-value solutions.


GoDry

GoDry specializes in healthy, natural snacks with no synthetic additives. Their original snack pack includes five varieties of dehydrated fruit with chili powder and salt, their tropical pack includes dehydrated local pineapple and banana, and their healthy kids pack comes in a smaller size with dehydrated fruit snacks for kids. GoDry purchases naturally ripened fruit directly from family farms and small-scale suppliers. Processing is done in small batches, and all products are provided fresh for maximum nutritional value.


GOEX Apparel

GOEX Apparel offers retail and wholesale fair trade tees and other apparel basics with the mission of connecting the consumer with the maker. Their customers sustain fair wage jobs that liberate workers from poverty. GOEX sources fabrics from a family-owned business in South Carolina, cuts and sews at their facility in Haiti, and sells to retail and wholesale customers in the United States. Their team in Kansas City provides custom printing and fulfillment services. By directly partnering with producers and eliminating middlemen, GOEX is able to keep products affordable for customers and return a greater percent of the price to workers. The short supply chains and travel distances also reduce their carbon footprint. The GOEX initiative emerged from Global Orphan Project's orphan prevention programming, which recognizes that the best way to keep families together is to provide strong jobs and economic opportunities. Global Orphan Project is registered as a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization, which means all profits are reinvested in employee wellbeing, job creation, and community programs. GOEX Apparel is a member of Fair Trade Federation and Social Enterprise Alliance.


Going Beyond Sustainability

Going Beyond Sustainability helps businesses identify opportunities to develop profitable products and services while addressing environmental and social issues like climate change, hunger, poverty, and racism. They offer skills training, copywriting, marketing, consulting, partnership development, and public speaking services. Going Beyond Sustainability raises awareness about social entrepreneurship and green business through articles, newsletters, books, and conference events. They donate to environmental and social justice organizations and provide pro bono support to Jewish Activists for Immigration Justice.


Golden Cashew

Golden Cashew focuses on making the health benefits of cashew nuts more accessible and affordable for Sri Lankan consumers by shortening the supply chains. They source directly from small-scale producers and process locally in the Puttalam area. Products include cooking cashew, oven dried cashew, roasted cashew, and spicy deviled cashew. Golden Cashew is committed to responsible business practices and provides support services to workers and their children.


Goldfinger Factory

Goldfinger Factory is a sustainable design social enterprise that turns waste into gold. They create bespoke furniture, interiors, and products from reclaimed, upcycled, and sustainably sourced materials while helping artisans and artisans-in-the-making become self-sustaining through craft. Their location in the iconic Trellick Tower includes a furniture showroom, community café, woodworking workshop, and teaching platform and offers studio space for resident artisans, paid learning experiences for trainees, tool lending and classes for community members, and a monthly People's Kitchen to provide a welcoming meal for anyone in need. Goldfinger Factory is registered as a community interest company and gives a third of its distributable reserves to the community in the form of free building and training services.


gomi

gomi supports the transition to a waste-free circular economy by turning the most difficult to recycle materials into desirable and repairable products that last. They repurpose lithium-ion batteries from e-bikes and combine them with plastic bag waste deemed "non-recyclable" to create design-led consumer electronics products like speakers and power banks. The waste plastic outer shells are hand-marbled and pressed in their Brighton studio, which means no two products will ever have the exact same pattern. Color schemes can be matched for corporate orders and personalized gifts. gomi's modular design allows for endless modifications and eliminates tech waste. Components can be upgraded, replaced, repaired, salvaged, or recycled. gomi products have a significantly lower carbon footprint than comparable consumer electronics, but they still offset remaining emissions to ensure both the products and the company are carbon neutral. gomi provides a two-year warranty and repairs for life.


Gone Rural

Gone Rural was founded in 1992 to economically empower rural women in Eswatini through handwoven basketry, a traditional craft that is passed from mother to daughter. They provide materials, training, product design support, and market access. Gone Rural now works with hundreds of women in remote communities and is recognized globally for their natural fiber baskets, bowls, trays, tableware, wall art, lighting, floor mats, and other contemporary housewares. Products are made from indigenous lutindzi grass and invasive sisal. Materials are sustainably harvested according to traditional customs, carefully dyed in their Malkerns workshop, and distributed to their network of community groups for production. Gone Rural's enterprise model enables the women to earn an income weaving from their homes while still taking care of daily household tasks, childcare, and farming. They support community development projects through donations to their sister nonprofit, BoMake Rural Projects.


Good 4 Business

Good 4 Business offers personalized sustainability consulting services to guide small and medium-sized enterprises on their journey to B Corp certification and help them implement sustainable practices. They provide certification coaching to guide businesses through the B Impact Assessment, pre-submission checks, and recertification coaching to ensure compliance with evolving criteria. Discounted and pro bono services are available for low-income communities, Indigenous communities, and other marginalized and minority groups. Good 4 Business is a certified B Corporation and a member of Catalyst 2030, SME Climate Hub, and Design Institute of Australia.


Good4Trust.org

Good4Trust is creating a prosumer economy, a socially just economic system where people can live in peace and harmony with nature. Their digital community marketplace brings together producers and prosumers committed to the exchange of ecologically and socially fair goods and services in a community based on goodness and trust. In order to open a free shop in the bazaar, producers need to share their production processes, sign a declaration of intent, and be approved by a selection council of seven people. Prosumers purchase according to their needs, share goodness, participate in governance, and help transform production processes. All community members accept the golden rule and the values of trust, transparency, fairness, and peace. For every sale in the market, Good4Trust receives three to seven percent to ensure economic sustainability. All surplus is reinvested towards the mission. Good4Trust collaborates with Açık Açık Sosyal Girişimler, Adil Ticaret Türkiye, Adil Yaşam, Ashoka Türkiye, and other organizations and municipalities with shared values.


Goodbye

Goodbye has been developing and producing high performance natural outdoor skincare in New Zealand since 1999 to help people connect with nature and live a better life outdoors. They started with Goodbye Sandfly, a natural repellent for sandflies, mosquitoes, and other insects, and expanded to Goodbye Ouch, which includes Manuka balm for scratches, bites, stings, chapped lips, and dry skin and SPF50 natural sun protection. Goodbye was the first natural repellent, first balm, and first sunscreen to break into mainstream supermarkets in New Zealand. Products are made from organic and natural pressed oils, organic cocoa butter and beeswax, essential oils, and plant-based emulsifiers, and are NATRUE certified by BioGro. Products without beeswax are NZVS Vegan Certified. Goodbye is part of Coralus and 1% for the Planet and supports OceansWatch and Protect our Winters NZ.


Good Cycles

Good Cycles creates safe and meaningful jobs for young people that break barriers to employment and nurture communities and our planet. They deliver social and environmental innovation through four commercial divisions: Good Bikes includes bicycle retail, servicing, and repairs; Good Deliveries offers inner city logistics services via e-cargo bikes, Good Spaces focuses on horticulture, landscaping, asset maintenance, and graffiti removal services; Good People specializes in managed workforce partnerships. Their Youth Employment Program provides strengths-based coaching and tailored support for young people who come from marginalized backgrounds, live in marginalized areas, have pre-existing health conditions, or have been long-term unemployed. Good Cycles works through commercial partnerships and helps businesses reach their social procurement targets. They are a founding partner of the Purpose Precinct, a Social Traders Certified Social Enterprise, and a member of Social Enterprise Network of Victoria (SENVIC). All profits are reinvested towards their purpose.


Goodfolks

Goodfolks is an online retail platform for natural, ethical, and sustainably sourced products from Sri Lanka. Their mission is to develop a thriving local ecosystem of micro, small, and medium responsible enterprises through training, guidance, and access to market opportunities. Together with government service providers and other partners, Goodfolks will help suppliers achieve relevant standards and certifications. The platform is designed to include spices, teas, honey, coconut-based products, and other natural foods, personal care and wellness products, housewares and home decor, jewelry, shawls, bags, and other ethical fashion. Goodfolks aims to minimize energy and resource use through remote work and data-driven order fulfillment systems that reduce transport and storage requirements. They are committed to collaboration, transparent information and accounting practices, and community success.


Good Food Naturals

Good Food Naturals specializes in traditional Sri Lankan foods and cooking methods at affordable prices. In additional to offering prepared foods, they freely share recipes to encourage more people to use local, sustainably sourced ingredients. Examples include roti, pittu, and kenda made from kurakkan millet, manioc and local yams like kukul ala and katu ala, diyabath, mung kiribath, and local vegetable curries served with heirloom rice or meneri. They also offer herbal drinks like belimal, ranawara, karapincha, and hibiscus. Good Food Naturals sources ingredients directly from home gardens in their own village and offers above market rates to farmers. Any excess is distributed fresh to people in need. They also donate consistently to Salina Elders' Home in Suwarapola.


Good Groceries

Good Groceries delivers locally sourced, sustainably produced food and home goods to support economic resiliency and food sovereignty in Oregon. They partner with small-scale Pacific Northwest farmers, ranchers, fishers, and makers to provide meat, produce, seafood, body care, home goods, and other ethically sourced products. Good Groceries rejects exploitative grocery industry practices by refusing to charge slotting fees, allowing producers to set base prices, and ensuring they receive the majority of sales revenue. They prioritize accessibility by offering discounts to nonprofits, accepting government food assistance payments, and waiving delivery fees for these customers. Good Groceries uses recycled packaging, plant-based adhesives, and compostable delivery bags and participates in renewable energy and recycling programs. They donate to Community Connection of Northeast Oregon's food pantries and the Nez Perce Wallowa Homeland's cultural preservation efforts. Good Groceries is an Oregon Benefit Company and is certified by Benefit Corporations for Good.


Good Karma Effect

Good Karma Effect creates connected, healthy, and sustainable communities by facilitating compassionate human engagement and collaborative problem solving. They support the establishment and maintenance of Good Karma Networks (GKNs), safe, location-based online spaces for neighbors to establish relationships, share resources, and find positive solutions to one another’s challenges. These networks enable community connection and empowerment and help minimize consumption and waste by making it easier for people to give away free items for reuse and recycling. Each Good Karma Network has a GKN Guardian to support the group and help maintain the community guidelines and culture. Good Karma Effect is registered as a charity and operates through voluntary action. They are a member of Volunteering Victoria and Catalyst 2030 and work closely with other organizations committed to social change.


Good Life X

Good Life X (GLX) fosters ethical and sustainable business ideas through incubation and acceleration, business development, matchmaking, funding, impact investment and creating partnerships services free of charge to businesses with a social or environmental focus. Their team promotes responsible economic development by supporting start-ups and mature companies in Sri Lanka and Asia to scale their products and services across regions and continents. Focus areas include food and agriculture, wellness, travel, tech, and renewable energy.


Good Market Sri Lanka

Good Market Sri Lanka is a curated community of social enterprises and responsible businesses in Sri Lanka. They organize weekly marketplace events and operate organic and natural food shops. The marketplace events include music, food, and activities and were developed to engage the public, raise awareness about social and environmental issues, serve as an incubator for startups and small-scale producers, and strengthen relationships between producers and consumers. The shops make organic, natural, and eco-friendly products more affordable and accessible, expand market opportunities for Good Market approved enterprises, and provide space for community meetups and events. All farm products at the events and the shops are either certified organic by an accredited certifier or are verified under a local organic participatory guarantee system (PGS). Good Market Sri Lanka supports collaboration and helps create a local ecosystem of enterprises that prioritize people and planet. They operate as a self-sustaining, not-for-profit social enterprise.